Stole Size (200cm x 70cm) – $130.00
Shawl Size (200cm x 100cm) – $180.00
Shawl Size (200cm x 100cm) – $180.00
100% Certified Himalayan Pashmina. Made in Kashmir. Dyed to your chosen color. Shipped directly from the workshop.
Ordering for a community, or need a custom format? Contact us directly.
Pashmina is one of the most counterfeited textiles in the world. The fiber is fine enough that no visual inspection reveals whether what you are holding is pure Himalayan Pashmina or one of the synthetic and blended substitutes that carry the same name across most of the market. For anyone buying outside Kashmir, the odds are not in their favor.
This workshop offers the unique opportunity to commission hand-loomed pure Himalayan Pashmina scarves. Our scarves are independently certified, dyed to your chosen color, and shipped directly to you from the craftspeople who made it.
Two formats are available. The Shawl – 200 × 100cm, 150g – is hand-loomed over 8 days, large enough to wrap fully around the shoulders or across the lap in a single layer. The Stole – 200 × 70cm, 100g – is hand-loomed over 10 days, worn across the shoulders or carried as a light wrap.
Every scarf is commissioned to order in Kashmir – hand-loomed, dyed to your chosen color, and independently certified 100% pure Himalayan Pashmina before it leaves the workshop. The Order & Shipping tab below shows exactly what that commission looks like from confirmation to dispatch.
For non-standard dimensions and community orders, contact us directly.
In 2016, the first group of Tibetan nuns completed the Geshema examination – the doctoral qualification of the Gelug tradition, requiring nearly two decades of study and practice. No women had earned this qualification before. His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the monks of Namgyal Monastery in Dharamsala sought an offering fitting to the occasion.
A nun was dispatched to Temple Road in Dharamsala to identify a source who could supply a large order of authentic Pashmina scarves dyed to monastic maroon. She entered Hilal Goona’s shop. The search was for scarves, but Hilal had some years earlier produced a single Pashmina monastic robe on commission for a private donor making an offering to His Holiness. He suggested that a full robe could again be made, and she returned to her teachers with a sample shawl and the proposal of a full hand-loomed Pashmina robe.
The Namgyal Lamas ordered several robes for consideration. Hilal oversaw the production through his workshop network in Srinagar. The cloth required a tight weave – the density that gives Pashmina the durability daily monastic wear demands. The test robes were reviewed. On the strength of those results, the commission was placed. His Holiness the Dalai Lama would offer these robes to the Geshemas.
Only later did Hilal come to understand the full weight of what that offering had honored. The first act of robe offering in the Buddhist tradition was performed by Mahāpajāpatī Gotamī, the Buddha’s aunt and the first nun, who offered the Buddha a robe she had woven herself. That the first offering in the tradition was made by the first nun, and that His Holiness’s offering – twenty-six centuries later – was made to the first women to complete the Geshema qualification, is a resonance of the tradition upon itself.
Word spread quickly. Monks and nuns came to Hilal’s shop to see the robes. For most, the price put them out of reach – a robe of this specification costs ten times what a standard wool robe costs, and those who have renounced material accumulation do not spend at that level. After seeing this play out many times, Hilal realized the answer was already present in the act that had brought the robe into existence. His Holiness the Dalai Lama had offered these robes. That was the model.
He also saw something else. Authentic hand-loomed Pashmina in the sizes committed practitioners require did not exist in the market. Not robes. Not the practice shawls long term meditators sit in for years. Not scarves whose fiber could be trusted. The demand was real. The supply, anywhere in the world, was not. He established Cīvara Workshop in Srinagar to close that gap – producing the full range of Pashmina textiles practitioners need, authenticated from fiber to finished piece.
The robe His Holiness offered to the Geshemas is the origin of this workshop and everything it produces. It set the standard. Everything made here results from that example.
Pashmina is the undercoat of Changthangi goats living on the Ladakh plateau above 14,000 feet, combed by hand during the natural shedding season. The individual fibers run 12 to 16 microns – roughly one fifth the diameter of a human hair – making it the finest wool produced in the Himalayan region. The fiber is combed, not shorn. No harm to the animal is required to collect it.
This is what produces the Pashmina scarf’s distinctive properties. The fine micron count creates warmth without weight – the fleece insulates the animal through winters that reach minus forty degrees, and the same insulation holds against the cold of an unheated hall without adding bulk. The natural crimp of the fiber gives the cloth a stability that keeps the shawl settled on the body rather than slipping.
The craft Hilal grew up inside – hand-loomed, pure Himalayan fiber, produced by craftspeople who had worked it their entire lives – was progressively displaced by mass-produced product carrying the same name. For anyone buying outside Kashmir, distinguishing genuine Pashmina from what the market calls Pashmina became nearly impossible.
This is one of the primary reasons this workshop exists. Hilal understood that anyone seeking genuine Pashmina textiles in practitioner oriented sizes has almost no reliable way to source them. Independent laboratory certification – verifying 100% pure Himalayan Pashmina content – is the workshop’s answer to that problem.
Every item is tested by the Pashmina Testing and Quality Certification Centre at the Craft Development Institute in Srinagar – the government laboratory established in 2013 to implement the GI Act for Kashmir Pashmina. Testing occurs after weaving and dyeing are complete. Each finished item is submitted individually.
The laboratory verifies fiber origin by scale morphology under the microscope, measures average fiber diameter within the Pashmina range, confirms 100% Pashmina content against adulterants, and documents the construction – machine-spun yarn, hand-loomed cloth. The certificate issued for each item carries these findings, its physical specifications, a unique identifier, and a photograph of the exact item tested.
This workshop does not carry the Kashmir Pashmina GI tag. The GI tag requires hand-spun yarn in addition to hand-loomed cloth – a production method that would more than double the production cost of each item and place our robes even further outside the reach of the monastics they are made for. The cloth is hand-loomed. The yarn is machine-spun. The fiber is authenticated independently.
Not a claim. A test result.
Each scarf is dyed to your chosen color specification before it leaves the workshop. Color choices are organized by tradition in the selector above. Select a tradition to see the standard palette for that lineage. Each color in the list corresponds to a specific Pantone reference, matched by a specialist dye laboratory in Srinagar to exact specification.
If your desired color is not listed, select ‘Specify Custom Color’. You can then provide a hex code or Pantone reference, or send a photograph displaying the correct color. We will confirm the exact shade with you before dyeing begins.
The Shawl – 200 × 100cm, 150g – is the larger format, worn across the shoulders, wrapped around the body during practice, or carried as a substantial wrap. 8 days on the loom, 5-7 days for dyeing and certification, then dispatch.
The Stole – 200 × 70cm, 100g – is the narrower format, worn across the shoulders or draped. 10 days on the loom, 5-7 days for dyeing and certification, then dispatch.
For non-standard dimensions and community orders, contact us directly.
Across Srinagar, master weavers work in their own households – each one a craftsperson who has worked pashmina since childhood. Cīvara Workshop engages this network against a single specification, held and enforced by Hilal Goona.
Hilal holds the standard and assigns the weaving, dyeing, and finishing to the households in his network that hold each specialty. Every cīvara – robe, shawl, or scarf – passes through his personal oversight before it is submitted for laboratory certification. He packs and dispatches every order himself.
Whether the order is one or one hundred, the construction is the same. The capacity comes from the network. The standard comes from Hilal.
Hilal Goona is the craftsman at the center of this network. He was born into a Pashmina household in Dal Gate, Srinagar. His earliest knowledge of the fiber came from his grandmother and from journeys as a child with his uncles to collect raw pashm from the Changpa shepherds of Ladakh and Zanskar. He has worked this craft, and shipped its products to buyers across the world, for thirty years. The standard he holds this network to is not a specification he adopted. It is one he grew up inside.
Every piece produced by the workshop passes through his hands before it leaves Srinagar. He inspects the weave, the dye, and the finish. If a piece does not meet the construction standard, it does not proceed to laboratory certification. If it does not pass certification, it is not dispatched.
Hilal packs and ships every order himself. If you have a question or concern at any point – before, during, or after your order – you are contacting him directly.
Every scarf is made for the person who ordered it. There is no warehouse. There is no stock of finished scarves waiting to be dispatched.
When your order is confirmed, a weaver is assigned. The work begins immediately and runs without interruption – 8 days for the Shawl, 10 days for the Stole. A further 5-7 days for dyeing and certification, then dispatch.
This is not a delay. You are not waiting for an item to be shipped; you are commissioning a hand-loomed Pashmina scarf that does not exist until your order is placed. The production timeline is the documented proof that what you receive is what you ordered.
At each stage of production, you will receive documentation by WhatsApp or email. A photograph when your scarf reaches the loom, confirming the weave has begun. A photograph at the halfway point, showing the work in progress. The laboratory certification document when the finished scarf has passed testing. Your final update will include the shipper’s tracking number.
Each stage is the evidence, in sequence, of what you commissioned.
From dispatch in Srinagar, DTDC Express Premium delivers to most destinations in 5-10 business days depending on region, with real-time tracking and full declared value insurance from the moment it leaves the workshop. Hilal has been shipping Pashmina internationally for thirty years. He knows the logistics, the customs requirements, and the carriers.
Hand wash with a gentle shampoo in cool water, or dry clean. Do not wring. Lay flat to dry away from direct heat or sun. Fold rather than hang for storage. Keep away from moths.
Accidents happen. Hilal has overseen the repair of items produced by this workshop and the results are usually not visible to the eye.
If your item is damaged, photograph the damage and contact us. Hilal will assess the photos and confirm what is repairable and at what cost before any commitment is made. If a repair plan is agreed upon, we will send a shipping label.
Holes and cuts can generally be repaired invisibly. Some stains can be treated. Burns cannot be repaired.
Turnaround from receipt at the workshop to return dispatch is confirmed at the time of the repair agreement.
Every scarf is dyed to order – your chosen color, for your scarf alone. Then a lab test verifies the pure Pashmina content. A weaver is assigned upon order confirmation and the work begins immediately – 8 days for the Shawl, 10 days for the Stole – followed by 5-7 days for dyeing and certification before dispatch. From dispatch, delivery to most destinations takes 5-10 business days. You will receive documentation at each stage by WhatsApp or email – a photograph when your scarf reaches the loom, a photograph at the halfway point, and the laboratory certification document when the finished scarf has passed testing. Your final update will include the shipper’s tracking number.
Yes. These are among our most regular destinations. Scarves ship from Kashmir via DTDC with full tracking and insurance. For delivery to a monastery, nunnery, or dharma center, provide the full address including pin code and a contact phone number at checkout – both are required for reliable delivery in these regions. For community or institutional orders, contact us directly before placing your order.
Yes. At checkout provide the name, address, pin code, and phone number of the recipient and the scarf will be shipped directly to them.
Select ‘Specify Custom Color’ in the selector. You can provide a hex code or Pantone reference, or send a photograph displaying the correct color. The dye laboratory in Kashmir can match any specification. We will confirm the exact shade before dyeing begins.
Yes. Every scarf carries independent laboratory certification verifying 100% pure Himalayan Pashmina content. Certification details are provided at dispatch.
Every scarf is individually tested by the Pashmina Testing and Quality Certification Centre at the Craft Development Institute in Srinagar – the government laboratory established to implement the GI Act for Kashmir Pashmina. The certificate issued for each scarf verifies fiber origin, confirms 100% Pashmina content, and documents the construction. It is provided at dispatch. Full details are in the Why Pashmina tab above.
Yes. Contact us with the required dimensions. Community and institutional orders are also welcome
The quality of the white robes was beyond my expectations – soft, warm, and made with such care.
These robes are not just garments, they carry a blessing. Thank you for your generosity and craftsmanship.
Wearing this robe fills my heart with peace. It is truly special to receive something made with love.
I have known Hilal Goona for many years… Buying direct from him ensures genuine quality.